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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1943_01_01'1..a� _- .l.W a _...4L_A1.. .. F _ _.-y t. L"..._�s'✓ n+'S•'.- wr =•ifs# ej 4. r C.' KE - ; «� 4 AL VOL. LX [I - : :YIEKERING, ONT., -* RIDAY, Jan. •1. 1943 No. 'U :'1942 Council fe r Pickerin Jownthip-���= - - ---- Acclam The Township Council ion John Scott, Claremont, also nom% St. Francis de Sales Hold Joblist - Westue� - Nomination -- Day held on Monday was anez of nnted for Deputy,, thanked his _ __ - MS _ - Christmas cones � : LOCALISMS tke quietest, with about thirty sponsors, - and the Council for. their - `White baby 'mums graced the H° persons attending, in the history past year's work. He was not s For the first in the history- -of St, chapel of Deer Park United Church Pte. Don Andrew and L. CpL at the township. All members of candidate; ' ,Francis -de Sales, a Christmas Cony on Saturday afternoon when Dor- Jack Andrew were home for the the 1942 Council were returned by E. R. Pilkey, was not a candidate" cent was held this year, with over othy Evelyn Joblin, Oshawa, dough holiday. a acclamation. and asked Roads and Bridges to forty children taking part. ter of Rev, and Ws.. F. Joblin, of Home, for the week end were; This was'' the first Nomination attend to a "death trap' at the The program was made up of Scugog Island, became the bride of Fred and Carey Robinson, Meeting in 60 years, that Mr. Don, ciorner o the 3rd con, and-the West , songs and recitations. A PEature of Henry Glen Westney. son rf Mr. and Mrs- "Rill" Sparrow-,, -T%. zeaton, iiwp. Clerk, did not act tow-nline. - He also asked coo- 'I to $elle;l116, _ the'program was +h atati^,n and Mrs. WYn. H. Westney. of - ,CIATP Potter, yjq}fredMa��t as chairman. 'Mr. - Beaton appeared take some action on the liquor of "toyland ". The concert concluded­ Pi�erin& Tire , oeremony was sol. Frank Wilkinson. , for a few minutes, but due to ill question here, has ving' reference to with a tree and Santa Clause, a emnized by Rev. E. M. Joblin, with Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Bushby and health, did . not sit at the meeting. the "bootlegger". part of which all enjoyed Robt. Crosby at the organ. The family spent Christmas with the Assistant Clerk, Lloyd Johnston, , At the close- Dr.. McEwen moved . - -_ - :" soloist was Gorge Bamsey. All • former'%' mother, in_ l- remont 11 +toed "- as- �sirrn ., . t •at- tan -af- rts�- be�nade ta- .1 � -- three ministers, brothers of the Mx: Fred Ruston of the Boyce Nominations were. received as Bonne War Charity. Seconded by Mr. "v� bride, have also been. married in Drug Co, spent Christmus at big follows: _.__. Burrows,., Council last year voted a C U' Deer Park chapel. The bride„ given home in Toronto. For Reeve Wm. Reesor, Dr, similar amount to the B. W. V. F. � -in marriage - - g by -her brother, Rev. Pte, Austin Baker and Ivan of N. E. McEwen and G. X eorsyth. Dies Suddenly Watching dame at _ -- K, --J. Joblin, wore a gown of powder the Canadian Navy are home for �► For 'Deputy - D. Blake Annie Open Sound. blue Nottingham.laae with matching the holiday, i and John Scott. ` flow=ers and veil. She carried a Chlristmas visitors at the hom For Councillor - W!, H. Westney, H. S. Gibson . stricken on 32nd «Public Health_ Organization_"' shower of pink' roses and swainsona of Mr. and 9 -Wedding Anniversiu! 3fi-% D. N. Loc9wooi C:ebrge T. Todd, Miles ' S: Chapman Her only attendant w-as her sister, were: Mr. and Mrs, Roy-Ball, Mr,' and E. •R. - Pilkey. _ ; ' A srominent s Dr. Berry of the Prov. `Dept, of Gladys, in a claret crepe areas with and Mrs. Gordon Lockwood an$ • p eLe enthusiast and Health was - the truest sveakbr at ,,,a +cm" b,,,t,a •- - T weri ,u�vwY, aLi,ie,,e in iva. cut er, g------=- �.nd- •;i3ajG ayaei�hinie3i -E: From the addresses of Nominees y �. this, week's dinner, the guest of with baby 'mums. Clare Gunter was and Myrtle, Mr. and Mrs, I days, Herbert Sinclair Gibson died Rotarian John S. Balsdon, The m' g' :- 1Ylni.. Reesor _stated that township best man. At the borne of the bride's Lockwood and � , road expenditures for the past two on Monday night while attending speaker was introduced bry Mr. Sam aunt, Mrs D. Y. N}cklin, MS>'Baret, ;Oshawa, - the Senior City -League Hockey Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, Hugh Squires and Years had increased considerably, . Manchester, .:Chief of the Dept. Joblin received in. a liberty blue J ` -- but- -that _the _tax_ ,A +a i,a� _i$ game in Owen Sound arena. _Ii'was of. -Vital Statue, Pray- . of Ontario a.-Pa., .._:.h _� ..... __ and- y Jimmy, .and Mr. end Cecil vacs. t d $ail _tr.. w`iI,.rll ;, _ creased. He reported that the town- the occasion is 32nd wedding and ,a regular visitor to th local and- o ing was the mother of the groom Pickering, land Pte, J, T. and sttiip financially, annivers$ry. He- and his wife 'were hlasonic Lod e. _ ppez roses. Lockwood, of ti'snairno, B. C. ' f was in 8� shape, g in twinkle blue with co with a surplus this year of. $6.000: attending the game, when he soft- The Editor is indented -to our After a honeymoon- spent in Hunts, 'The W, M. S, of the United He stated that County Road sued a heart attack ai,1 passed ,Reverend Rotarian member for the ville, the newly-weds will reside in Church will hold. its January meet costs had been cut frown $90:000 to away before medical aid could be notes talcen by him, in our absence, Pickering,- For travelling, the bride ing at the Home of Mrs. W. C. $70,000, and stated' that he believed summoned. His untimely death -of and from, which we quote donned a wine woollen suit with Murkar ' un Wednesda Janus 6, - 54 years is a great loss to Sporting Public Health Or anizatwn . - y, January that the tax rate would not inerease g matching acbe�ssoriea, ' All secretaries are asked to br[ng --over the next 'year, lie also es lain circles as well as the Dept, of Dominipn• Goverment - P Fri hwa •s, w•hei•e he has been em- ' _LAING'` KINGSTU�' their annual reports. Strangers will ed the "burden the new .town- of g - • y Provincial Government �F •.::`},,,; , c. ._... . Ajax had beef l. to the Council, but' 'uy`'d iur many years. -n:s neaan • .Municipal .Governments that Ajax was I-as not been the -best for over a Public Joan Kathleen Ki ' ston, daughter n sal a o expense to _the c H th has become the serer � - g- - township. He also explained that Year, following a motor accident, loos concern iif ' tjre three . bodies _ of Mr. and .lire. G. K., Kingston, Report on. War •Savings at Local . _ the work of 'the New Ration Board but of late, -he .had been much the two latter being the more active Pickering, Ont., became- the bride, .Cori. School, Oct. A to Dec. 17� ` better. Saturday afternoon of Earl Mort- - for the•towaship tiva,s purely voliin- - - - •_ � the Federal Dept. being somewhat rose Laing, son of Mr,'and °burs• P.C. -- tary. Mr. Reesor has been. in the `after spending last Christmas in. limited in its contact with the -. Purchased between school oiosing Council for the past eleven years', hospital, he -was Looking forward to 'situation. The present , objectives of_ Lanig, The wedding .which took j , in June of thi$ year•and opening in and will sow start lira third tetz n as -the coming' hockey season and toe rheas bodies sic -. Welfare o!- the Place. at Sew Thuenas inglica� 'September Reeves, holiday Festivities. --t Public in Control of Communicable church, wasx 'PW6rmed by Rev. Bonds � 11400 00 D. B:ai� a,,,,;o, Chairman icoada Rn ,�+ "r D:J«a, mild. . $ „rironmentat sup- _ E E Ii .lam :. -,. M. .,. }t,r'„�, � '•i W Certificates 80.00 and Bridges, reported 16,265 yards 1888, 'he was the only sun -of Mr. ervision. - laren presiders at the organ. The Stamps _ - 32 „N and Mn. James Gibson. He - was bride, given -away by her :father, of gravel had been laid in the town? The State can do Borne things,' -. ship during the Past year, and the married at' Toronto, where he and but :municipalities must do theirs, wore a dress of_ �i•hite lace and tulle Total coat of the year's world to the town- Mrs. Gibson, the former :tiaoans The plan is to enRaourage eo�pera :1rti Spanish ltnes with a fullllength Purchased betl+een Oct, 2 and 1Dec. �P was . near $17,000, although Bush, of Highland - Creek, resided tion plus interest in local situations; veil She carried a bouquet of red 17. - they had been `allowed $18,000 for for .soave. yearrs before - moving -:to '•Constancy of Purpose must be and -white roses. Miss Betty King4 Stain s - _ this year. No bridges had bee3t liulstein Rears' -kept in- our thought of Public ston, sister of ,the bride, was maid Weekly er a $17G.501 a Prior to joining t P Health”. _of honour and Miss Barbara- Scott Y - � $14,71 erected this year, and the township j g he Le artn:ent _ = P of Hiahw_ays, - he wsj Assoc AtPIt hri , Higheat ” week, Dec. '17 -a11r 50 00 ..I ' -et. I:.l�,w.t T F° -N uI mber of pupils who have. bought - fenoe. although the cost for this with the hotel bdsinesa tqr.- several _ Laboratory - . 'Were of pink chiffon with matching two full certificates since school work with the snow plow etc, had years. Three sons and one daughter . - Research ,velvet .hats: Their bouquets were opening ti cost the township _ n�?'ly $13,009, besides his widow survive, T4if y are Water -)Supplies F' ; pink cornflowers and blue 'forget, ]umber who have bought one lull He added 'that they would 'sot have 'Lloyd, with. Grey and Simcoe For., ]ltiduetri l H me4nots, Win. Burns %::as best man " ygieete certificate since opening 1g to borrow arty money this year and Beverley, of Holstein; Harold, at. 1 Good lenvironinent for workers and John Williams and Ernie. Pa,t,� Grand•totaI War Savings $5683,Op that they now had a surplus in the home ,arid Eileen --(Mm Arthur ` - 'freeii from inenaccs of gases. ridge,' usliers.. bank 0 start-the new yeas. Hro"rn, of -Holstein), Three sisters: '.Child Welfare W. H. �Vestaey, Contingencies, Mrs. James Lennox, of Scarboro, Tuberculosis Mrs. John Hammond, Toron o; and stated "that his 1}apt. had met with Raolt striving to control welfare' sn'.' An Ituterrstir; Kemursal " "old Decker farri on the Brock Rd., an new Mrs George .Hammond, Paris, silo • -- y proble t over the past survive. our own field. and .whose husband erected they 3eaz, .but had met ;:11 quite' satin= . _ - Sanitary Engineering - 711 recent visit to the Roman buildings no,* there. 'fiery farm factorily ", "He believed the $250 Water Supplies. Catholic , ,Ce�mete in flickerin grant received frown the 'Maple Leaf - Claremont Sian . Flees Char a itsel is rather interesting from its Clare g Sewage Disposal Brought to our attentio.i .a new and association Fire Insce. C'o..w-3uuld,be duplicated of Non-support.' Pport' Milk _ interesting monument there. It is i tion wtith S Ha mar Green ,. S50 a it each- year": , - "F 'Water SuPViv of a }1Pa11 +1 {171 4,�,: �, ,.* Is wood, who was a frequene' visitor - -E T.._ :�, Il ..al nepC., adVib 9�i El::,,; _........ oijj,- ' Su eSted .. c„ a uy, as Mrs. Decker was ed eared before Justice of the F'eace, gg post war consideration unusual in that it is in the form his maternal aunt. Anotfier sister, of Relief costs having dropped to - of municipal ` water supply, for of a Celtic Cross.' Thi's form - is Miss As, Morrissey, who half that of other years: W. C. Murkar, , on .:Christmas Eve; Pickering. Such projects are in characteristic of 'the Irish rY Elizabeth M. S. Cho oil charges 'of non - support, laid by people, died early this year, is also 001"_3 Pman, Power and Light, - care- -of- ttstructiorr -L i., 1-;;sC }'y u,e1 in ire cemeteries memorated, as is Nidholas Morri.. and Damages to U'Vestock reported ricxer�ng Ttvp. P.elief Dept., Accus- Board who are interested -in' the of the .Old Land.' i the aTnetint: Tecei%•?d by the - ed, was remanded . in • cu,,k Ar +01 ssey who left Pickering when quite g Tuesday 29th.­ On investigat;on by ""ter supply •and sewage ills_ IL liar been. suede% oy .t,, J. young, • following the prevalent Ts,` as $200b, and $660,50 paid as posal, and spread of diseases by Morrissey, of Wyoming, Minn. as a trend of the times by " goi compensation to owners for sheep the Childrgn's►id Societe,- Relief water supply, memorial to the family of James west ", It is interesting to note -- T losses. Dogs at Ajax ,vill_ be _Officer Johnston and Officer John Typhoid Fever �_ = -'.,Morrissey memo al who was' one ' noted" b ' Norton the latter stated • the - of the that " he was acting as .Sheriff of y the= Assessor this year, y 'fairly well controlled. More coin_. - ,early residents of Pickering, or, as Alger County, Michigan, when only, and the taN collected. :found no fire ,-.in ._t!.` home mon in country than in city. "Much it was then called, Duffins' Creek, twenty -six years of .age. Later he t Ili. _N, -E. biclven, a :Nominee; and the _children crying from cold more healthy in cit that in the coming to this village' with his'wife returned to Canada, making his and hunger'% ' y (wLo was not going to run for uoent�%; through, better control in Harriet Hargraves Morrissey, ima his home in Orillia and in Toronto, �` ,ffi^e), suggested to the' Council, A,-Coilr:t order since ivritirig the urban centres ". ..mediately' after-their' marriage in Mr. E. J. Morrissey, by whore! that with a surplus of $6,000 they above provides comtorta')l, for the Control ,over t3phoid . iiad now the early 1850 s The design for the this memorial is erected, also left ` dould build a road running through - farxily, - g reached that point in this country, memorial was chosen by everend Pickering for what was then_ r't]je his property that would r!�et $7500. pus sow Rutnittg, -for school - of 4 deaths -per one million= persons. Sister Helen Morriss Hotel: •Northwest" at an early age, - He stated this "QOuld save the - This was obtained by rigid control Dieu, and foundress o t Mary's for some years Mayor' ofgeBui1y Federal Govt. $25,000 a ear ". He Children , Y of water -and--milk supply._ filtra= Hospital, and' has been b sutifully Minnesota, and the James Morrissey also suggested the Council have an The Gray Coach Lines have no�v -.. - - . ` tion and chlorination' of water and •carried out. These- two are the last Park of that town 'still speaks of ' Ark' Raid- Siren'.:�installed, and also Put on a - Pasteurization of milk. "Milk .carries surviving members of thi lay his _ that a eommittA be a orated to P special bus to' carry the • s 8'e Popularity, Later, having •becur� y ~±' pp-- -students 'to S`carboro High School, more disease than water". family ,-:- and their names also ed - property in Wyoming, he moved' investigated dividing the wownship The boa carries students only, and Over 98 -p. c. of milk consumed in appear on the family memorial. to that town, aria has for the past in two parts to cut, down taxes An is on. a--run that psis them to` the thus - Province - now pasteurized, a Besides • the founders- of this ten' years held ­the: position oi3 certain areas. school just in time for classes° process which DOES NOT_. .destroy, .19-in iiY, ,lames and Harriet - Morr.. Ma or G. M. >F'oravth a Nominee f r - Y' and MaeistTSe Reeve - IYte— former Maus; -running too early - lk: - -.. -ie� Mori =ter, -stone Viso coin -�- -gh; as are most large faYa,J ship, ,dflclined_ the. honour and -meant having -the children, leaytng memorates Mrs E. J. Murphy riles, the members of this earl congratulated .the Council on , their home early, arriving ' at school at - Ratariutn.. Geo. Todd will speak at (Annie), pf St. Paul, Minneapolis, Pickering group 'were wld %cart{ l' wwoork over rile past year, ind said next week's luncheon. whose husband was Special Claims erect, i£ seems v llttsn ''be would like to see our, Reeve,' :;bout. 8.30. The new.' sat 10 was _ P 1"'S �t ; the result of the work of Dunbarton Mr, and Mrs. Robt. Rudd sent Agenti of the Great Northern gaily monument in the cemete Mr. Reesor,- elected Warden of the Services Assoc.: y P way; Mre. George Cowan (Harm their <,'. ri'� this' ounty for 1943 ". the holiday at Guelph. P -ld home town tiiauld iet) of Pickering, who lived •on the commemorate them all, New Y ear �'o x,11 pp� Our Readers �,srt as ut' i. '•` F' Tk".- �{ f+ %n'•r'-%�E„7zqn%- _�w:`rrt• -,. i.: F-«*+ eX: arK „�;,-,^r*+•+rw^.v- -�.va-..._ ,- - .. '- ... .. , _ '- • ` _ _ 'rS"•'.�. -•v \., . yam.. '•d:,•_ ,7,.T - max° - +r, *,- •-�w' _ SERIAL STORY WOMEN - Armed Cargo Ship OF STEEL HEN A GIRL MARRIES ° Sinks Axis Raider 8Y RENE RYERSON MART I u. ' s. Merchantman 'Fifjhts _ 'To Finish In South Atlantic THE STORY:- Enid Sharon, out nicely. Pop and 'Mom would «,. »'. Fightipg to the finish, a Un-t+d Tstenographer, decides to take a think she was working and stay - - secret vacation before settling ing at home. Letty would be out a I States merchantman took -on., en- down with Tom Driscoll, whom of town with them. And,she hau - Y„, :;, emy surface- raider to the bottom she has promised to marry. When already told Tom that she was with her and left a set -ond severcly "• dams a in the South '? ilant.tc w month. g yaw her treats are invited to a lake in away for , h g P g'0 Y resort Enid - engages furnished That brought to her •mind an- the 'navy Department d:�t'kru ,i. telling Tom she must � l ~ ' It was the ,first repGatt`+I in- apartment, - --:'- g other detail that she mustn't over- stance of an armed tnerchavrtuu.n make a trip out of town with one look. She'd have to make some z -� r The :a_ w6a + sinking a surface craft of pri, of be. - ....t_., arrangement about her letters to �.. _-shows her the apartment is Br. ' Toni send them• to Grace . ? *. '`;+C,.' -q� '� Battered from stem t rite r,i, `�;` : Henry Holliday, son of the c;ty's llrng3ine and 'have her mail them s y ` her engines crip{ed, she .'traded leading surgeon,' whose picture from the mine where she was sup- E:`:. ' shell for shell with the ra�fietw i'or ..... ” Enid had admired in a newspaper. - ' 'posed to be, and then have' Grace - - - a furious thirty -minutes. , ° s under stern- first ,V' ,.x .: As- he slipped un+l 'r LADY FOR A MONTH --' --rbe snialler bur �, re It was a%vkdard but it Was nee -CHAPTER V _ essary, if she was to keep her • , eiders was a rau><- - ... - -• .. � "�� �"'.,� "��� .. � of lames, witllisurvivors ciarnhcr- m t whereabouts a secret. The worst } The first Tls0ub.tt that surged ing over the sides to be pieki,d np into Enid's waking mind that of it ivus' it entailed some plans- 3 g ible explanation to Grace who ",n by the larger and sevcpely +I:,. mornin was THI•; APART�IF: \.T. p ' _ °�• mageil raider. _ She had rented it. There was no would naturally be curious. Only 10 of the 41 memben+ cif -chance to change her mind now. Nervously she approached the g the merchantman's crew and fire C y head stenographer's desk as soon For once, she had actual! dared men of a navy gun ere% survi•od as she arrived at the office. As to do something site wanted to, 1 .. the. ?art September battle and tF - For a whose month now she could Enid had expected, there was no t?* r - 31 days in an open boat buts live a glamorous life. ciiiiieuny about her , vacation: - ., ; V �s survivors reached the South r1t• But there were -a lot of details urace conisulied her abaci uP va- r «, k ¢ r !antic coast. cation schedules for the depart- `- to be attended to before she eou.c; p ':<;a ;; The out- gunnecr • suerc:::;s +irnan enter into the enjoyment of her `ment and told'Enid that she could :;rs: was hit by fou: salvos. Tate ksrge " secret paradise. She made excited have her month starting Monday « if that was the wa she wanted it. guns of the smaller raider algrar as she dressed. First of ail, Y --- -ently were fired'to ether iri;to a -she would try to get her vacation • . . _ central control , system. _ to stal•t immediately. For having Enid gripped her slipping tour- Finally a direct shell hit—vii ti:. ••. -- rented the apartment at what, to age and, flushing painfully, asked magazine,- put the after -f-:ut 4),;t her, was an exorbitant rental, she Grace if she•would forward some of action. Five shells •,•ere i wanted every possible minutt-_in-" letters for her from the mine.. exploded by the hit. Captain 1'r- - .which to enjoy it. "Why "" Grace Dingiine, asked Buck, listed as missin She didn't really think there in her crisp, direct way. order to abandon ship. would be any difficulty about get.. Enid' blurted out a half truth. Only one life4oat hau u tang her vacation on such short "My Britain's firing lute, the women of the production lines Y .- notice. August was a slack time My boy friend -the one you met aria taking an,.ever- growing part in war work. Today, wawmen such through the battle unbattercd the other. night - wants to get as theag make up more than 13 per cent of -all the work4'rs in Eng- it had drifted away Trom toe 4n,,; _ ' at the plant, and /with John Stan- i #rried. and I -I'm not sure I land's steel and iron industry. Many survivors were unable* tc wu, +un u+g uwea, away, +,!noes like him well enough. I want to reaen tpat comparative saxeLy. would be even less doing than Enid decided -that s cool green -suri, both of which form boun- The boat headed for the Si•+ tb . usual. get f - and r then, maybe, I m n print was the most becoming. daries between Japan's puppet Atlantic coast., its course i 't oy She intended to tell no one. "And you need a big wide hat to empire -of Manchukuo and Russian . only, the most rnaimentsr- a ;od Hither at Abe. office or at home, make up my mind. I don't- want y him to know where 'I am, ad- I -' go with it," Enid added. Siberia. gational instruments.•,.Sgi:ait: ;+r ;d - _ 4s unit! "$Lit- where- .- will_L_ Rear it q" �, • ,.., . - triads - beast -tl.c �� % I-;;- - told him i was to go to the mine - " ber vacation. Her plans were in- with Mr. Stanton. It wouldn't Letty interposed weakly. ei'e employed on Japanese military hausted men bailed unto! ti+�tr - aocent enough, but no one would "Make- Phil take you dancing installations, bad been killed after- arms were numb. But the :ipr,ils :r be much trouble to you, would understand. They would think it Rv„ when he comes up over the week -, ward to prevent the leakage of brought 'rain-.-and drinkiab w.iker ridiculous, if 'not downright in- ends," - Enid ordered. - Letty's pa- secrets. The Japanese had re- to keg the men alive. -Se- ( -r:,i, of - - mane, to spend her savings and Grace looked at hdf shrewdly. thetie gratitude had brought at cruited labor for Manchuria by, the ore seriously injure+! t.,,.n She had always thought Enid yseation hidden away in a nicely Sharon a little queer, but this lump into her, throat: It wasn't press gangs operating in forth died notwithstanding fir: <t ,+id furnished apartment, enjoying right that anyone should have to China Provinces, it -was said. treatment. topped everything. Riding from y rather furtively or one' short feel w grateful for a dress, Enitr Chinese youths also were being After 26 days .one of t:. +.' + ++en - a boy because he wanted to many g' month the surroundings and at- thotight. ben. Being very worldly, another s , * . forced into military service oaten- saw a butterfly. Another e. w, iwo mespbere 3 a @ y possibility popped 1nL0 �rriCe 1 - - -- -- -- - �ly-in arndit -Of VBTIOBS aayan- „+ul=na. Laa1d nC3r''�ii � of living than would ever be hers' Letty looked like a Santa Claus mind as well. Maybe there was, ese puppet regimes, the review of the water changed fro u fl-Ark -- w Mrs. Tom Driscoll.~ - a secret intrigue back o! Enid's under her stack of bundles when said, but the Japanese have placed blue to light green. Vvc• .•'. ;va R.. ' ti it was, things would work the two arils parted- Enid pressed v o-tr request. One could never tell little •confidence in these levies; later, there gas this brief y about these niev quiet girls. a couple o! crisp bills into her estimated at about $00,000. About in the lifeboaes • log - DREAM LOVELINESS hands, a couple of tens. Letty two-thirds are being used for gar- sighted land at 4 a.m." " _ _ Enid had. no idea why Grace wed to give them back to her. " in a Bewitching Nightgown Dingline's dark eyes suddenly 'Really you mustn't ... you've noon duty in China, but some have . Fifteen haggard,• men stw :: c rid - _ �eent dancing. If sale, had, her been sent to the Southwest Pacific ashore, reached a small - me h. Phil can send , done enoug war area, it. was reported. and were taken to a ho_,. _ . face have been even a „ _,. - money for the food. ,,,• ,� deeper criniaon than it was. ' "Keep it," Enid insisted'. "Yon :. . Gann EATING N S' °' = don't want to have to skimp when - -- - - E any rate Grace agreed to AS you're on a• vacation.- Just keel) - forward her letters to Tom and Mom from worrying about me, How to make a meal out of ;our pork chops is good nv••: io every war -time cook. . The secret lies, in the 'follov i.ig rec',pY Ia .- _ - his to her, and Enid thanked her and have a good time. I'll see you pork Chops with Corn Dressing. Notice that the- dressing goc': wV and turned away immensely re- in the morning, I'm coming over the pan first, with the chops on top and %hat the whole bust::' is lieved that the interview was pith Mom and lop to 'see you baked. Here are the directions: - _ - / over, leave:' Pork Chops with Corn Dressing -- - - - She had arranged for Letty to It was walking back !tome alone �4 cups soft bread crumbs 1: teaspoon pe;:l,er _ meet her that noon, for a luncheon Sunday morning that she had 1 -clip All -Bran ?i4 teaspoon poultry season•.•••.' date, Letty thought. Mom, who 1 tablespoon chopped onion` 1 cup, drained -whole' kernL: -.-' T- U i� her mlalma. Everything " ao tar }% _a- cRi FY t ,.nr o+nc, t Ora lixii,id h ltlt h.e. .... - _ 1 un 4 C was - aa if , s an > beautiful] d - • . - out C _ °' had worked Y g tablespoons fat 4 pork chops to care for the children. Enid simply. _ But now a hundred em- 1 teaspoon salt 'fi teaspoon salt - °: spotted her sister in her pressed barrasain possibilities presented ' + o and shiny beat blue dress the mo. g Combine bread crumbs and All -Bran. kook +'.roan 'and cc.. s mpnt s1+ merged from the office themselves. What if Tom or Pail fat until lightly browned; add to bread mixture \� ith sr;tsnnin�., • •:+ �. _ ,,, ,,,,,,� -f ms s from the of. .and stock or' outer liquid. :ilia thoroughly. • Press into bal:in_: C• t;, „ w• t� , c . .,id . item to ran I ith Sail. 0' ' -. east, and added ores. more rte flee found out what she was doing arrange chops on top of dressing and sp - k e ', i the list of _.purchases she. had in bake in moderate oven (375 F.) about 45 minute uncover' "a,: , •^i�. .� mind. with herself? She'd look pretty 15 minutes longer. . silly .trying to explain the apart.. - -- - ' `J She sprang the surprise "on Yield. 4 servings (8 -inch baking dish). _ t'. •;., g „ ment in Yield-. Letty over the lunch table: You She continued to 'worry ile' w and the oungsters are Sofa with i`�' SIDE GLANCES By George ;-; y' g she packed the -few clothes she x ''% { Mom and Po tomorrow." ' = ��s -';• , p was going to take, with.her —sinew t , ' Lett s le eyes blinked . aria Y � turciroise -blue sweater ensd:m "You a n e. You began to shine. _ n e , the g i She e suit. „ • _ _ her white linen s and _ cc - , 1 n— t men •t � .. - - e in that c n ar re *r tt "You're came cry e b g going to the lake with = she bean t gone with her folks to _ � -� ± {.t F - o them. What would Mom and Pop the lake as her mcithe> had ,wanted.. �` t � '•� ' rid rattling around in that cottage,_ ,her -'to do. _ alone for a •month' it's oig r enough foi a dozen people." Rut h+r ,io'uhts were rosy ui,ce she arrived, at the apartment. The 1 i' . Letty 'a face clouded as swiftly i taxi driver carried her bags in r R _ r• "\ as it bad - brightened.: "Oh -- I and she G ed him generously, ° �� • �,: �•. s " ,'•-:�_ couldn't, Enid.. The children and , and then closed the door with a � against , iclothes r I haven't the right kind of cgsrg.e. I.eantng ngast t she _i .?�'• �`. > - , - to wear. -You Know how it is at turned to survey her new world. _.. s summer resort. lux- --2676 "That," Enid` told her firmly, All this charm, this deuiet S)ZE S right + as here . .all hers for .a y c S! is what we are going to fix right month t" t: , now." . ; a ­(Continued .14xt Week) By Louise Lennox '5',' _ Your dreams should be sweet They bought slacks and sweat- - #� * `' 'ee ' in this ch ing nightie with the ens' and play_ suits, clothes that r midriff eature. .Bake it of crepe wouldn't require laundering often. Japs Move 1,000, 00 And bathing suit's ranging from a l in a blossom tint; or treat your- g e g Troops In.Manehuria �' i 2 ✓ _self to the cosy warmth of a conservative black one for Lefty i1 io a saucy- canary- Yellow wisp of -- - - - -- - ___. -- -- �3IanneIette gown that follows tis@ _ ' -a suit for baby Ann. . -And -- sand. -.-. -A - Chinese Government review ' - 1 +. °, c long- sleeved version of the paf buckets and shovels and boats. of conditions in Manchuria said "l tern. Style No. 2676 is designer in It had been years since Lefty about 1,000,000 Japanese. troops . 'r sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 36, 38, had bad any kind of a vacation now are concentrated in that rag- iLO, 42, 44,. 46 and 48. Size 36 and the prospect of an entire, ion and Japanese military prep"ara- requires Sibs yards S9- inch =fabric carefree month of fun was almost tiona there have. been increased •t +� °y too much. Wait until I pinch considerably,in the last year. ' .With 1% yards lace edging. 'i,'000,600 • ''f 4 Send twenty cents for pattern myself, she begged Enid in a .(The_ estimate of - 2. to Room .421, 78 Adelaide St. quavering voice. I know I m go- Japanese troops ,in Manchuria has i { ! c •� -- - --- an�-tiU wail0 u - -- - - - - -- J' West, oronto. -Wrl "amour nairie�" - ,'Not yet," Enid told her. "We ' 'thorities' -and ' is about'- double { c address and style number. want the dress department next." _ earlier estimates.) Isut'e to state size you wish. Lefty followed her meekly, 'too ' Tice review said 'the ' Japanese _ a - _ F - _ �, t lY MG NwVIC[. IaC. T. Y. 11[a U. • PAT rrs' ]SSOE 1-43 overwhelmed to object any more. had .built fortifications along the , In a daze she Te-t an efficient southern bank cif the Amur River "Do you- Naiad N lsi l' Seat? I'm _ double - parked." d salesgirl try dresses on her, until and the western bank of the Us- i C -- _ 47, LOOK OUT, ALASKA A Douglas Fir Used World War I because of the pro- Cossacks Ride Again water and weather resistant. duction of spruce for this purpose, For Aircraft Skin on the Olympic Peninsula. A rail. Against Nazi Lines road was built into the forest . - .. ._ operation, defensive or offensive, wilds and there was considerable' War dispatches told of the hard- Several V e n es r a Sond*d activity, but not much came of it. bitten Soviet cavalrymen charging — ------ —7 With Resin Glue Make Flat As a result there has never been fair behind the Nazi lines south- in both the -all-wood plane and —7---!.-Panel; of Plywood much faith in "wooden airplanes" west of StalingracL material as's substitute for alum- in the district until tbw -successes It wa4 the first formidable oper- Paper-like sheets of Douglas fir of recent years. ation of the sabre-swinging war. wherever it can save al�fmindm.11 wood, one forty-eighth of an inch In Western -Flying for July, r1ors for some time. L: thin, are now being shipped East Stratford Enright explains that Russia's cavalry Is a primary to be fabricated into "skin" for . the fault with these early air. arm of the Red forces. The tough metal aircraft Industry has sud- plywood gliders and planes. These planes was in the glues that were riders answered by the " =thousand crossed up there, now that these *the shipments, as yet, are neither used. the development of syn. when the call came to restst—the large nor many, but they are seen thetic resin glues in the two do. German invasion. aircra.-L••• as highly significant. dades since accounts largely for Each man is a horse-mounted and there are 25 men to The standard plywood fov' the improvement In plywood fa- arsenal In miniature. Heavy rifleis.• which Oregon and. Washington. ..brication which, under heat and capable of knocking out a tank bomber trainers, and gliders' are have become the world centre and pressure, become impregnated swing from the saddles. Some still 'swords which is being used so extensively with the wood and forms what Is carry the great their an- _ the war -effort of the Unite materiK1 cestors made famous. using' both the Est, regulation ply- e--4. Bluiy and Curley of the Afizacs "Proof er J -A LETTER WITH A ;:0P) ;09. ME SLACK %OqDsq ;:Oq ALBERT 16 DELAt))Z� 2YOU JACKY 111011igh for Jacky" NOW Do You KNOW l4r.'s DEAD ?_ YOU HAVEN.T 01PANIED IT YET By Gurney (Australia) RECO(Ifi ln His 1-0 A: - W" 1 % Nations is the .familiar flat panel water and weather resistant. made up 'of several veneers bonded Al The boom of ply-wood aircraft In the forefront Of any Red army with resin glue and of steel-like 't co n- 6fttruction is now on," Mr. E operation, defensive or offensive, strength. Many' a person has tried right writes. "This boom is seen their forte is sudden swoops — ------ —7 futilely to visualize this sturdy in both the -all-wood plane and through thinly held lines on Uzi- material as's substitute for alum- in use of wood in metal planes suspecting Axis garrisons in the inum in the covering of planes. a "skin" wherever it can save al�fmindm.11 rear. Small bands charge in rge re- Vo The plywood used for involves an entirely different prro. The article speaks of "the phe- nomenal speed with which the all- . ,where they are lea expected to bit hard cesi. This plywood region, while metal aircraft Industry has sud- before resistance can be organ- ized, and if the.ot)position is found You're apt to get your signals crossed up there, now that these *the it has had- an extensive — part- Fa supplying manufacturers Of— �O'__ e_ OL".LC` VA7VdU1Vj11X all -W-Uod too stiff , -slip away. quickly. comely young ladies, recruited for civil service jobs with Signal aircra.-L••• Corps, are heading northward. Hum-m-m, and there are 25 men to metal and wood planes with such such Cargo. ships, - twin - engined .•every wQman In the frozen north. tip parts as bomb doors, wing tips, bomber trainers, and gliders' are LISTEN TO structural members, floors, and all being constructed of plywood, - - - - - - - - - - - - gusset plates, has not, until re- using' both the Est, regulation ply- COUNTRY a a n I #1 12 V n IM JaMp X3 n By cently, had part also in supply- wood, and the new proae� molded as IS w a %V MIMS V Jim a fa JM REX ing:Vplane itud glider coverings. That is why this paper-thin fir skin" type. EW T Exit 1942. Enter 1943. taken place smoothly, and, In ply is seen as so important. ____N . The turn of the year is usually most cases with surprising efficl- The regulation plywood is pro. Also Studied J841111 Items of Interest From Ontario 1: a period of review and resolution. ency. duaed by peeling the great fir Weekly Newspapers As we come to the ql"e of. an- logs with a rotary lathe much like Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, EACH SUNDAY AT 2 P.M. Other year, it might -be interest- But the big headache, the great unwinding a huge roll of paper. as a youth, studied military sci- Ing to look ,back briefly Into the anxiety of radio in 1942 has been :..3y the new process the veneers ence in Tokyo and was a member CFRB-860 on your dial calendar of radio broadcasting replacement equipment. The Are sliced vertically with the of the Japanese army. during -the past twelve rhonths. huge transmitting tubes used on . grain of the wood. In the regu. mast brPodeasting equipment, costing, incidentally from $800 to lar p wood cif thp regign *ha liquid glue is smeared on the 44om-the standpoint of the aver. age radio listener in Canada, few $1000 each, are becoming ery .9 plies; in the new process-the glue in like MINISTER f,; and far between. In their is used sfieets paper. no :LABOR changes, have been visible. With construction alloys and metals of I regulation ply-wood-inay be curved ascarcely any major exceptions a strategic war nature are re- or—molded after it is fabricated- lbiost of - tl�o�ptt�t- natkid--ml_ quire h d. . . alloys and metals which in the new process it is_g[ded _afi� —Huna-AVA a" answer to Previous muzzle 9 Buries. InternafAonal broadcast features s have. been maintained. In spite o are urgently needed for the manu. -fighting molded * in one process. Z 1, 6 British Z fPi A 'rl A 1AIL11-111EIDi 12 He believes facture of direct equip- A Spocialty' Job minister of P 01 0 P10' EAi ! IDEf labor should -the rigors of wir the customary ment. It has been necessary This plywood that 'takes the labor. E COOEIP1 i I �be —during routine of news, entertainment, therefore to adopt measures for place of aluminum for covering 10 To eject. C CE 'war time. leducation and instruction has continued over the the conservation of radio trans. the fuselage and wings of planes P I I Norses' P od. ;="a A �Ei E-A 13 Not uniformly. ether waves an a "o comparable with MIMI-': mitting tubes. Many firms whir is a.specialty job which is done ' 12 Mongrels. I EAIE E-JE P P-0AM I _PA� '�Sjmjwff 15 Sweet lar services during days of peace. formerly manufactured parts and in the plywood pl an tsOf the East, 14 Periods. F= 5LIC, substances. Radio has continued to provide equipment for broadcast transmisr using mostly hirdwdods. Mahog• C, 1) 16 Organic basis SET110T 1 17 Pressing tool. i ters have discontinued their former activities. One, for in, birch. spruce anij-HAlaut,,are the favorite woods, slieed into thin y L, W= ji bone Q I C CP war news, and .it has been exten- stance is now solely engaged in veneers for this purpose. tissues. V E_ E T 23 Insane. Neely used as a medium of pub- making fine electrical parts for It was not until after Presi- 18 Golden plover. e G T C 24 Cut down. lie information oii questions re-. lited to 'our war depth bombs, the terror of the dent Roosevelt ' set the' goal of 19 Born. : 20 Of the thin ng. - -A R I I'l 25 Birds' homes. '26 Tree fluid. effort per- -Iuwa even inore-so, than.was.th the enemy submarine. . Another is the United' States production of 21 Circle art. _R - '18 Fruit pastry. - case -in1941. About the *only out• making electrical panel instru. planes per year at 125,000 that 22 Senior (abbr.% 39 Heavenly 55 Twin crystal. il) Part of a lor'-.- ward and visible indication of menu, of a precision nature foe 'bombers- the, industry began looking about 23'He hais been a . bodies. 56 Coarse files.' 32 To decorate. shange has been the shortening army and fighters. At for new-materials., Metals, it was. Power in the 41 Tribunal. 57 Oozy. - .34 Artists' ...of the hours of broadcasting by& the present time it is im impossible- po seen, could' not supply such an labor 42 Italian ri,06. VERTICAL frames. as 9 statio-8 seress the to getc, repairs -made to micro- enormous order. not even with the since lkfi .43 Parts of Weeks. 2 Anything Z .35 Tantali -es. ­­v__ ton. Even this has-been phones without taking some tech.; increased production of 'alumi- (pl.) 44 Sh�a!Ee7i_. remarkable. of 37 To warble. accom-7 pliallied without any undue inco�n- nician away from a "direct war. num. 27 South Carohna 46 Measures. its kind. 39 Brains. venience to the listening public.. job. Not even the favored woods 'fill (abbr.). 47 To negotiate. '49 3 Attendant for 40 Foam. Certain stations have opened up T ".- 'So behind the scenes of would-- the-bill. -The-supply 6f mahogany from South America is 28 Panel of glass. Being, '29 Pertaining to 51 He joined the sick. 43 Ana. Actual being. - 45 Dres�) fasterer'.i a little later in the morning, and radio broadcasting, the 6usireqs of car. limited by restrict ions -on car-go the dawn. dockers' — -.early .4 5 Street (abbr.). 48 Organ of signed off somewhat earlier at night. That's about all. rying on has bi��ome' increasingly y vessels, and the supplies of spruce 'woods 'are 31 Foray. in life.' 33 Salamander.-. 53 Growing out. 6 Exclamation. hearii.%. 7 Taro root. 50 New England difficult. Ily guess is that it will become progressively- more dif fi- and other limited for- large-4cale production. . Other 36 Rodent. 54 Opposed to 8 Viol taour.). -Behind' the scenes of radio; cult -in 1943. _. The larger net- woods have had to be considered, 38 Fish. stoss. instrument. 52 Frigid. however, 1942 has seen many works of the United States, as among them vougias tir which has Z 3 4 15 6' '17 8 9. changes and,muny causes of anxi- well as individual `stations .in Chn- the, advantage of being both an .4ty. -There -has, been, of -course, ada have found it necessary to abuncL3nt and permanent supply, 10 a period of transition of working establish a "'pool" for replacement One' meth.6d is to mahogany J staffs "e mainly U en ant. I i sti� equipment, and it is becoming �or -surface veneers and use-' other 1Z 13 A.111111F, . ..•. . —in the -armed forces. ' This ba'--k quite the- vogue for stations to w4ods-far, inner_ sheet& 014 been particularly true of engin'- ."swip", part and techpical appar- The Douglas fir industry of thin 16 is 7: -eennx staffs. -The armed qer- atuq. northwest regVn is fari too vices have - .sought technicians 'for' I!AZ has seen e plang 'busy just now to stop and tinl:er Wth. 19 ZD special 'duty, particularly with the put into effect for the safeguard- this new process. With la!)or RoYaL Air ,Force .and- its branches. ing of radio trans4nitter-s. Yladio short�xgcq. labor " freezing 'and 72- Z4 Z5 26 )7 Th6 radio broadcasting industry; is too important in the national stretching of the work week, it frequently tly to -its embarrassment, life of our Country to permit As difficult enough to fill the "ass - 30 has responded loyally - tar the call. sabotage or carelessness to inter- producticii orders for military -Often Young, inexperienced en• rupt the flow of news, of relaxa- construXon. purposes.. But the 31 '52 -43 36 17 gineerg have stepped into the lion and inspiration.. ' Inconsr)icu•' industry is intenEety interested in breech, and ,�arried oh.• In &cvj• ously,.but nevertheless effectively, the newcomer as a, challenge to 3 41 eral cases young Women, • with.' every radio transmitter is guarded rnect.. Already four mills in Ore- Nriei t • 'control Lo I;u LeuLL. taken over the panels Radio's resolution for 1943 is British Columbia are equipped from the men, "To carry on," %ith slicers and are shlpi)�nz these 47 48 ­,., V.. several young women, in, sole - • near, vertical, paper-thin veneers ItZ charge of the engineering •nd A' new type, of propeller for, to eastern plants. 53 55 'transmission equipment of the American military, planes has six Startcd in World War 11 smaMer radio broadcasting units blades, two sets of three -'rot at i ug The region -was' deeply . inter. 56 57 in Canada.' The transition has In opposite directions, ested in plywood aircraft dur'in-, :1 e--4. Bluiy and Curley of the Afizacs "Proof er J -A LETTER WITH A ;:0P) ;09. ME SLACK %OqDsq ;:Oq ALBERT 16 DELAt))Z� 2YOU JACKY 111011igh for Jacky" NOW Do You KNOW l4r.'s DEAD ?_ YOU HAVEN.T 01PANIED IT YET By Gurney (Australia) RECO(Ifi ln His 1-0 A: - W" 1 % =T. i'T7if. - as .... �,. ..•s •.,rH -' -.. - C .. •'.•Sr: • {; -. .. -... .. V • ... "..j°:ix l.. • ._- ., a- . .+ .. . ..i'.." - _'a.Y .....: ?ti _ . -.�,� ,�.•, #. '�I i'Hr; !'lGlilritLlrG. Jw1E11r8 � - •--- -' -- -- -- • - •- - -�.. 3 - -- - �` -- - PICEZR6INQ W. IO TI GE �°�° ° "�` °° - . �"' Fsrr s Elevator ".>� Year. si.so .°`a' . I GREENWOOD RON GIB 30N bibse- Aptlons to Tae United � Shur -gain feed, sera E,rftyone • and a..13rh4 3t, $2." in ""aft Vice ;mill, chicken MILLS TRANSPORT :.A Ha starter, growing _1886••,936 Happy TRANSPORT _ . . Poultry, Hog and other Concentrates And Victorious -�da le Leaf Mutual Fisa mash,, laying mash, - always on h.nd. � CARTAGE �N� - p range mash, joy -" F. L. Green - SAND - GRAVEL STONE eW Year - •' • ' - •��S�P�g6� —�4. . , Claremont • and WAWANESA INS. OX.- starter, conceritra• , Onts tes, calf starter, tur• STANLEY Res. 3i3J Office 38W Rates for Farm and Country ' _ _ _ Buildings - �Gy starter -. _sal - - '•A ( A AI T E D' r .'Windstorm Insurance on Buildings in blocks ' and bags _ 3 _ DEAD HORSES AND CATTLB -. Windmills, silo's etc. ���'�'� -- PER�€R�SENT Na�lairc Fig r p p " • For r Purina fl sprays R,ee c one �..: pick. u h ' 1 7 Automobile Insurance of y THAT,FRAYS THE TEMPER .... .•„ .... i All Binds AND N E fEV ES. t T 'IY{ A Y 8 E aROO1�LIN 6s for cattle. =StOUf fv><lle CLAREMONT ' ........4 ..1 918 y YOUR EYES, -_- -- _ PICKERING - ..._ :_--- -..... bee - -- N -. - . - _ – - -- �. �.! {: Yiione �toui vie o D. - �IE`I�EiIHV'li ... .......... 89 .C. NyUG sleek ; �'Bowman . & Rowe PICKERI�iG; O *1T: - - -- 111 RSRAY, FRIDAY, SATVItUAY - _ . • INCOUJ T ........ _zone 2141 __ _ _ .AG A - Ylttaaal, ANTARIO WE DELIVER - Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. and 2. - ow r• a' We pay the - phone charges - -- - -.- -- - - - -- -- - - - - - - -OSHA�WA, ONT. , -- - - . The Fieef's In - ' pine 1516 60RDONi YOUNG LTD Toronto Phone Ad. 36M COMRIE '� U M B E R ! • Dorothy Laxriour Wm. Holden �1 • • - The CO. s c : . V1%P_ wlg� our manv fr*aaiul - -- - -- _ _ dL1M1.1�D •_ -- -� customers' Scarboro :'Junctiox -O =DAY, TUESDAY, WEDN'SDY an _ January �, 5, 6 _ ,A Happy and Prosperous. 'TELEPHONES. - Howard 111? and Scarboro '336 _ . pp.7r - — nsu -dog-- Ways To Be Not To Be ' - Np�Year - Carole Lombard a Benny s It is estimated that the crust of Wool Insulation is liquidated by - Caro rd J ck -!he Saving in Fuel over a period of 3 to 4 years.- THE• DICKERING LUNCH You also enjoy the addled comfort of having a more. even temperature THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Jan ?, 8, 9. • - - + ' throughtout your home: - - uary To our many friends = �. -2 in. Plain Batts ; 4c. tier Square Foot South Of Tahiti _ R In. Plain Batts AQ Ugr Square Food . . 2 in Paper back Batts- " 4 1 -2c. per Square Foot y ALSO Wid c;l twiliJRWS pe ,in. Paper back Batts 6 1 -2 4 r Square Foot r I Loose Wool _ $1.15 per bag.. Man From 'We 'extend wishes for a -Happy '(a bag contains 5 Cu. Ft. sufficient to cover 15 Sq. Ft. 4 in. _thick.) I s'• ,L J • - - i�7i — -- Paper back Batts are for nailing_ rto the studs or rafters when batts � - ' - �' *��� �W �e� 7.7: — are ,jpla4edd in an upright or slopifig position, and also to exclude :dwnp� o; Rogers Gabby Aa3eg - THE VICTORY GRILL - �ness. _ . ;MARTI.N-SE \OUR. 100- P. C. PURE PAL'`'T ti - - - - -- - - -- - -- - _ F . •. r _ - - -'— — - %�L! .Annual Meetings Iin Pickering very the remarks and reports 'Were then - : O�.i.i�� "' �� ATTENTION I Poorly Attended. - -_ addressed h this :one lady. es. who ICOd'„!r!f Q,j"J -' : -_ ,u ere all the Institute ladies who j �. t• Ton nUTneroua other dc'ti,6ties were tn. attend these meetingm?), 1lQ!'Ql101tS probably. accounts, .for it.- but -the Let's not hear that "crace from'' ,Frost Wood _ _ i Police Village and. School.1,jrinnual behind the stove - "Well, L suppose ,Brock Road Gravel �•. y I Meeting, for this •village on :Monday the same gang pare runrung` things - - _ `;Agency - - 1',•a -nd Wednesday : eceining's of this - again this year' , agairi this time. Pit j' week, were proLbly the poorest Ij you don't like , the was things New Stoeb of Parts so SMA - C l attended in many years. On Monday are - going. get out to the meetings - - so-vice on above maehlw y' C�"'uSheII Pit Run fevening for xhe �'ilia ge meeting and say so don't ' "shoot -from ' Implements on esitibit V serves I I we had to go out on the street and'' ,behind.. the Bill ". The school board . I � • ]! • • Plows, mowers eta ,� ' drag• -in- two -men to •make the legal of . -194`? were, here too' glected,' for number required t opeh the meetd 19.33. L. -LYE Sand - and - -Graded; • t siinrlet-:3�h de- I ing. o.�ing to tfie- =1aEr zos�nship> - ' Pickeririt Fled Ciosai- ` den we cats furnish. 1 audit, a cetmplete finanei -1 is no - Clare CYlOn t -Ont • - : Memorial' that ,will • - • iS tont. rr longer avaiiable for this meeting, `170 I n:anthIy .meeting of r please from every but the Trustees reported an antic Dellrerei or Ln ilia i 1II Pit t'S�:'`':. standpolat. In dignity • ated 'small deficit. The -Fire (2 Pickering Branch Red Cross' will Srierbush Hos ital be held in`the Red Cross Rooms on - I>HO`E - plant, Pick' 9? r 3 f of appearance our will have a credit balance of $455. Monda •, January 4,-" at $.30 P. m. Government Licensed Toronto Office - Howard 6471 �' . work will stand out I With difficulty. only,. in.. tiew of. ti.e y P 14f911} StrE— ,S,toriffyille Out .1ntj 101 ����: HEN' _ 6 r, TOUgh the ages. I inipossibility of getting anyone else,, I Lne ' isoaro of 1J•3'_: .• xessrs P!•ank- :News I:Altor still conrinea to bed _,0 Phone 1:11 - -- Kingston Road West f : ; .. Ptouse, Jno.' S. Balsdon and Art. at Pickering. ;Maternity, Medical, and Surgical i N.' W. STAFFORD W Mitchell were ''elected for 1943 cases taken' 1 Highway' l�onmmental ` . RADIO t O • �S E�2V 1 C E „, to the once of Police•- 1%- ustee. 'blr.' John Murkcar continues -to be 'Maternity Semi -Room At the school meeting oh 'Wed-- forced' to-remain -in bed" with ott>y± pb 168 Whitby'. pow y g -the: same "condition 'an hour or so each day, resting IU _ • Registered Nurses in attendance and ' - _ _ �r'� � —_ reads evening 24 N)ur arrvice' given. - ��„Srid ( existed." From the teaching staff,' a chair at his bedside. He expresser :.'Ambulance •Service 7• �: I the janitor and ONE other-rate- his thanks, -and appreciation to the MRS. E. R. GOOD '25.37! Payer fa - lady), • a. required''nuniber many friends who have extended could be .;Wade u to carry. oft. 1 good wishes dkri 'the` holiday. 41 8b P c�5' n$' LAND 'SURVEYOR !Guaranteed Repair Service _ y Model �• Ma r od ,�. Make o _ ., An o a m..»~ 3�eeri � .. S" I • FIELD ARTHUR F I L, :gym .911lom and Asnoil. IM PHONE 62 r 3 r- WS -11M AwL Oslisiv a. Pblor PICKERING - ONT.r .."-ill _.seat.° �� ((( •• k I =. ' _ Mather •d.•rnte a 4�BL4'A•. , -1. �I, , .,�, ^r^ i it >E? 1 v LL ` �y er C�' ' d, 'E Mu},ei w y ! t•e� i T vrev �..- �. in I 6' protein u I Ten :S U' I ' 0 22 0 6 ::9kw 3 0 _ % / `wf 'Y r ':r, -- ;•. •:fie to be used ereordinj N tie `'.."`:Nl ^Ra a. e. r. rn'•.M�¢o.., I A ':i `', em•e•, •/ [nio You Me. By se.k, Biddle. a terrier N•r 7�r IT %811c /Olelly t011 r.0r•ere �eey was tool.' we •rest his : 4•. 's'c.K,:4.y'•T+e::'•i::!+,1a.` ;\<v ,y : d, •n' •e3.w:• v.�'!• v of 100 h .sass. S e • ": " ! A w 9� flee# en• rodnefn' 1663 ems.. !I•!e • hb oar feed -he di ri . eoN of fJ636 K .. �. ' t d' ' q�j,2 ; `$•S ,;.,;2:'',»:- :v::{a_..,,y., ,c..., ivn. "A «. .d NY - . . -- II' -_'�i Per hen.'- 19 aq- Right proud Ix wsi!. w 1 •d %U Was aiwt r„I t rW rif •R fern here w.f)ireA • )tai 8`,,?,ec:::.; ,s.. �: ;3' ;::. � ;.r�:.r:.: •S° '" : .^c. t I told hi it t iii I his n 610 L■r •fed EGG •7M 7M V C US am � r of 8 • 3lati K a rp,i i :'. ` °'' .sass , .. ^•. ',' rw and wafted �• • role of 116.76. �� � Mti > >`Yyiz` ;., y.. auk: ;:.�•,,,,. =ill Far r � ::. :... ;; .:. •�, � • ..,� : }'.•�:. _ ' � ;'�'•:•'•''. ;,, ;: tai .,,'.:; :.: g, :+'�t, G:i •;,. s shmAlwd w /..a now 08-aw be ar't a"d so ail x , 4 :,:. y:. • " St:`: ;''a`; i:•.:ii3 ;y'?' � '::: 3 . 4, g • its • Dfn a �, •` ,: :;>�' v,,;�, .. <,,' > ;, > „tiw `: _ > <•.. • �+ '. `� RU tlu4 1aHL[ ig enr>,• -x' Y` °' ' �; >'� ��(p> � y�Z y 1 � � ; k a � `” - o • .. 1 t� ford! t f '�':< � ::. : � . K vk s.°w'�a'C � N 'i' v ate+ � aaJ?..;t , rrl�RIr lZ F Tds .,'?"s• ;, : r ;•o+tr #O Y n,6'` ',r, ., ..',vrco 3aa.��, �y^Sryh; . r,:v "'� a • - -- ,''4., Vii. i 1: -;' ' ;i�. -<,__ '9•,'i .':, ;_.". - _':.�' :t1s - _ .. ,a�'�:'a r. .. %�>`h:•::. ::,;� ;:»i�',.....:?x: >`t�':v�, w`"s• {i%.,� • "�i:PT.w• ;' :, $;.iaT?i:.,r ;'•: ;a: �i :;a:: �. _ /ILL THt - gASKIT EGG. H A British Convoy Runs The Gauntlet;. - . .And Wins Through To Malta. sl _ lire, Roy Morrish i door►sy, oat,►ara bomld ". : - j[i. - isoaas+d._ Estes, Phyllis and ling the ministry _of song- .W- y Dunbarton Red Cross Society will Coate and begin. Zhe Now Year � right. co All a gtliiy, .spent Christmas with Ivpa l Jan. 5th at the bonne of Mrs. Chas. ? . TUit*rs Here t and Wednesday in the Baptist and Mrs. Law, Whitby. - mss, F F Pte. Betty Manion,, I Church, and Tuesday and Friday in A H&PRy New Year to All Our The W. A. of the United Chttsxa'> In Memoriam l And Miss Peggy Manion spent I the United Church. Readers. will meet on Thursday, January 7, : holiday' with their mother here. Thieves tape $25 from 'WoWward Misses Jessie and Jean Simpson at the home of Mrs. T,_ Annun. GdBSON -- In loving memory of a Roy McLeod, of the Air. Force have been spending a few days at Roll Call _ "The New Year", dear Mother,' Georgina Lyon Gibson _Store at Brougham. their father's farm here. was home for the holiday. Arrangements are in• charge of the -who passed away January.'; 194'1, Mr. and -- Mrs -D-.�- e first robbersr in some time Arthur Petty, Clarence - Lydell', Fellowshi Grou I�eglr spet:t ---� Alex. 'hurray and Lill oclu�a s p p' and a dear 'f:ather, William EL the holida • a Sandford. in Brougham, took place last Wed- prn� ' y t nesda} when Constable J. Nortan a few days fith their people• at ( Gibson, �, :io passEb ativny IS,.�y -Zel, - Mr. and bars. Bruce Har'ton were r ' Christrrias: Revak 1938. with Alm. Cook for Christmas. as cawed. Clues left, by the thieves A ]LE1441" showed they had forced their was: Stanley and Ruth Taylor ,vefe � �'e often sit and think of , thep Mr. and Mrs. James 'Ward �rere with theiro �� when we are all alone, y in t1gough the front door. _ About parents, Mr. and tits. i't•r tremor y the W. �l+ and s: - • ' Mr. and lira 'A, , L. - hooey were , 8 -5 in cash was taken but g.Dods in A. J. Taylor for Christmas: y is the onl • friend that DIr, and bIrs. VI"alter Hollin er � - -V C. - griq,.can .tail. its• ovm; "with Toronto friends for tine �� eel: the-- -- afire remained untouched. 1 g ; James Kolar., T. C,, A, of Brandon For frieridb Are .irzen _ and family spent Christmas VtiZth ' am . end. l .. D. A. Pugh succeeds 'Alt. Pretty Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gale, of Toronto and John Kolar, R. C. A. F,, of ' true, Mr. and Mrs. 'B. F. Kilpatrick Exeter,', spent Christmas leave at We lost our best friends when we opt Police Trustee .Board. bliss Norma Gate ••• returned home ; -- ---and family at Brampton --far the__t the Annual bleating of the with them. for the holiday. home here. lost you. . :. holiday. r,•iitagee R�tenayers anal' Trustees on .` t- -Sall" missed b , Week o Pra e-t y y- Ma and Ed.' f y -� -- -- May ,and the Holiday: Her sist8w, Thelma,. resigned his office- after S years trt,e ng„t;af s„d Ttr„Pa; �bxTY,•t,'- . isd the- aiisiortune to receive pain• retan- of the Board,_ and wila- be — - - ful injuries while tobboganing. replaced by_ Mr. I3: -A. -Pugh, who cohigregations will observe Week of TINA \if�1 _ - Hr. and Mrs. R. S. McLeod spent Prayer by holding joint meetings, ;'To the 'Rate avers with the two previous members beginning on Monda p of the the holidays with the Matter's par- Mr. Mait Anderson and Mr. James ' A Skating Party for the Youn' follows: Y, Jar), 4th as T�• - ,To,rnship of Pickertngs enta at 'Richmond Hill. McCullough, will cam a the 1943 p 1 'Union g y Ate Reeve and Members of his Mar. John Button, of Ft. William g l?po le s of the "United Monday, at the Baptist Church, Board. Church 'will be held this Saturday addressed by Rev. Dr. Reddick Cotmcil wish to express their app - .. � is visiting' with her parents, Mn - . _n j }ar,a R F 'T+'rt�gyth Micg •irta _r_ _ evening, January 2nd The party is tT` esday', at 'the United ' .Church, f teM&tion of the confidence placed - - to__be hejd_in_ a ,_ -.bur _ia case _--addressed by . Rev. Norm]an Burke In them on' their election by •aw4 holiday. roug - inclement weather; then .pahawa - Wednesday, at 'fhe Baptist Church, lotion for the year 1943. him Arena: 'You are waned to. be at addressed by Dr. Reddick. Season's Greetings to One and Mr. and' Mrs. J. W. Farr and nlomsn s Store at �..SV MTh t All. family motored to Woodbridge. for P. m. ursdav,, at the . United ed Church, t . : a _• .- - The regular ,meeting of the Y.•i addressed by .Re ;�. Burkr..- yYlIli<8m Rte, the holiday. Miss Gladys Gannon was home P, U. of 'the United Church will be The meetings will begin promptly - -- _ lift. and airs. A. Giles, Toronto, with her people Christmas .Day. held in the churdh on Sunday at at 8 o'clock. It is hoped tnat these ' �ke � c +,_a _ P P - • Call VIL lilCll{YJ laC1�% vaa�R�r— � The Annual chnol Meeting at _ S- _.roc The - program is - in .charge meetings .K ill be., - largely. attended Win. H- Westney bMr and__ tilts —R- F- CoolSe� "and the school house on Dec. 30th of the Fello«s ��� _:_Mary, of- Waterford were visitors -- +Tt11ch blessintz result: The. George- T. �bdd _ T1te Misses Malcolm and. Mrs: -•topic' =- `.`The Road ..from our chairs are asked to coop,: ate in Miles S. Chapman _= in 'town:_ I „• ,. ,' - Miss Margaret MacDonald spent holiday. h- me for the O _ - -- the week end with Mr, and Mrs. -the Rarid-all Ellicott's entertained - - - 'a number r,7 their young cvusfns on - -:, Miss Clara Neale, of Toronto was.' as . -• . . - : with Mr. and Mrs. Stewart' Graham Saturday evening. , The C. G. L T. met at the home _ _. ..... �. ►ice-- lte4id�y _' . _ of Mrs. 5 Mr. and Mrs. (Rev.) Walter Meeting: and Election h Officers on Daniel are in tfie 'city this' week. December 30th. ` The• Happy Circle Mission Band �� 1 Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sherk spent , the holiday with Mr. and Mrs. J. met for their Annual Business tL- llougl�erly ux w,•f:..Ilt. Meeting at , the no-me of. iuiv�l,y- - Mr. -and airs. Fred Mowdez spent HarloclC on Wednesday afternoon. P �. Christmas a-itfi the 'attar's .parents y *_ i 1 ;�►�' ' 3 . Tife Sunday • School Annual Bug- _ at Stouifvi}le, _ loess Meeting held at the home Of » ; =- •%J I 3Ir: and Mrs.- Jos. Efripriirgham ;�.' .George Philip on Tuesday fere with Mr. and Mrs. David Dav- -- e,enzrl}. son' on the :tioith to$-nline. ± T„achers. ,Report in next issue. j bfr. and Slrs._ Jack Lehman, .'of ! 11V. J. -and Mrs. Brown. their JIbronto. with_ his parents..- Mr. lat+ght-er. 'Margaret and husband .�k\ " 'f'' �� - 7 - ...,ILL Y� .. 1It� .. ..� J - � - 'Ltf'ni. (ret7z-�!' iizyla. ,. ••� �►W \lP/,, -_ -.�i+► -L'" -' their parents,. -, Miss alyrtle Bacon -- Borden. paid -Mr. hnd_ Mrs. 'T. C: ,l, d! •Triaonto., at _her horns• -- Misses , � � � .. ' Brrw n a visit on Tuesday last. �. 'bits. tiT° .. -: Isobel and .Mabel Johnston, Toronto, 'Ira, -Y� . Orton and daughter, - a-ith 'their people. Dr. Tomlin- ( - moon's family ith -their - • ,lr6y and laFmiiy, �i'eefon. ly parents. - were Christmas _guests at .the T. \ 14fr, and Nfrc. Jos, Ward at finrne. 1 _ � � { _ \`Ott "n home. '�Irs. Harry Ferguson \t - - Mr.: and bias; - Gordon. Ch•erland,, �' f Kingston.. « parents. _ (Nellie- 2 rtnn 1 from FTaneis, Sask. _- gs with his tilt:" ;' � � ���. �•, , � '+ J�.,, i{eitl, . Rp 'G, onto, vO n Mr- and has't,c��z visiting her brother and 'Afrs. Fred' `T :,_,i - .:bir. and a f - puled. her � T,�- �tller and sl,ter to «`f ;nn, �"\ �� e� i<� r •.� J Ray RumoltY sill' • daughter.' Grace, _.!• _ i'here'trrre•'tnany 'farrtiv:. gather-, �r .-Ray lidi:iiltvr;' a d Cyril Linton, ot. "�'�✓ :,' the 1. C. A: F,. and :Mr, Thomas lugs -an Chriatinaz Dad •- at the - y �` `; \ _ i,on',e.Of Mfr. and Mrs..Fran1: Carter .. 4 B rke't and gun •l'ryrdvn, wrth ' lira: + _ \ - I:lYmnhr, rn Chrlss, a _ ver p : larize one,, _ Ben' Carter. ;�,�`•� �` / . `t � �+ °liar -Day. Ken. Arthur and blildrell Lon'st, Osha�'.'a. of Green Rig ?r,. hip- ions .and dau - , oe iy�� • -` .. - ` 7. --,and Fra'cis, of T,, ronr;o, -and `fr• ghters 'and th,,ir fa oilier down' tb+ .� i the 4th j ;eheration. ;;il assembled t - -- - - - - -- -- - ---- -- - -. - -- an�] .-fra..� &tJarp��rl- ariial: Flter y -- - —�!•nr a grand reunion. 3a ffi all, and. -7. of Z`,ceed, -all hQ:a: . the hill ;y a •art, - enJ�.ahle 1� =as s etif :.. ,, _ e _ - - _ _. Claremont and North Pickering --with ne empty chairs, un p 1 1 _ Red - Cross.. Society .t)ilj, meet at the tliese days. , n home of V r.. and Mrs. A. L. Hooey �..� _ _- �lietera'n gat he Annual Christmas F,nter� on January Stns at $ p. m. Each'" tainnient. • the Sunday school -- Lrnit is asked to attend. -. _ - held in the town =hall on Dec. 22, B' k'from scores ' bombing' raids over a dozen countries, The Ordinance of- the Lord's and• the, hall was_ well filled to hear - - this young airman has found adventure ­the sides! Just out Supper will be observed in the ,the children's entertainment,- many - - of his 'teens an eager youth in he's a veteran: in Baptist Church next Sunday morn - • the chitdren's'-e'fforts along that " ' ` . g Y Y��r ing. Mr. Daniels subjects will be - experience. .He s a first -line fighting man, trained in the I A `well balanced program •pre. - '-science of war at 5- miles -a- minute! "An Harli= 3forning Mail" and pared by "Miss Reesor,_ teacher of "The Human and Divine Elements tote. Public School was given, on= �. He and his buddies is R.G.A.F. sir crew• are team - mates. in 'the Bible'; sisting of recitations, dialogues and Qpe to The Annual Supper• and B_ usiness c raunnei,. Wireless. ra r, Bomber, .Pilot, Navigator --aII musical numbers was,. appreciated n- work together as a smooth, swift "attack team" in a giant Meeting pith Election of Officers by the parents of the• children. / will be held in` the Baptist Church Rer. ' L E. Kennedy' ably filled -the - bomber, Their targets 'accurately - surdeyed in advance by ' ' on' Thursday evening,• Jan. ith. chair. At t -� �*° daring reconnaissance pilots -their flight protected by the* 'There will be New Year Services Santa -appeared. and distributeii the _ ar Too- blazing guns. of fighter plane's.­- bombers wing their in _ the United Church this Sunday 'children's treat. Join "' ism h Nn n ; dian women fill vital �oba in the aS n rve- t^?IItry. at the usual hour, sacrament of the Thee urged Air Trainia Plan has loom for'more men who _ Lord's Supper will 'be ous yv6d at - Meetinl�durinj; the Week. . „ .. R.c•A.a'. women's Divuten, re_ 9 _ iiasipq' mew for wiz crbw duties: the Morning Service.- i' E.er,l;ta are needed, age Meta want to be viitfi these fighting comrades' of the skies. Right '_Monday evening, the Ioung 40, physically fit, with at least -The Women's bMissionary ' Society High sehool entrance, Many use. now applications are -being accepted for air crew duty, at ` tnet in the school roam of the Peoples Union met in church for fal and fascinating jobs await rleation of .Officers. Program . • in you. do experience needed. The R.C.�i.F• Reeiuitinq Centres throughout Canada. United Ckiurch on'' December 10th. charge of Miss Doreen Carlton, the A= Farce will train you gaicklT If you are i' This • was the Christmas Meeting to tale your place with Canada's y physically fit, mentally alert, over 171/2 and riot yet 33; . with Mrs. W. Gi. Scott's Group in 1Missionarv, Convener. _ airwomen. Full information atanT you are eligible., If you are over 33, but have exceptiorW. &C.A.P. Aecrnitinq Centre, or qua ifibstiona, you rnay'still be considered. Lack of fornW charge', of the program. After the NOTE - a reminder to the•ladies .walla address below for book]it. education is no longer a bar to enlistment. Opening•' Exercises, ' coriducteed by of the Women's Ifistitute, to bring .{ the President, and asstste"., she •'tdteir pound of the' next .' =- Group, Bev. Kennedy -told the story meeting. - of "The Shepherd . who 14iissed• the AI�ADIAN �►I R _ ORCE'_.:­- e Manger Officers wer elected for -- - - - :. A R C R E \!�/ - - - -- the coming year. Mrs. Kennedy - -- x epntributed a - solo to the program, Cherrywood r" _ The meeting .. closed with a few fitting' words by thb- Presiuent Mrs. ;,Johasione Mrs. Forster of Oshawa , .• .• ,' teas been• .�• yireek of Prayer to be observed here spending. a few days with liar - - - FIGHTING COMRADES OF THE SKIES - A daughter Mrp. He Michell fj'he week f January 4th- has There will be ' a quilting and a - -- -- - - p .been set aside as a Week of Nfeeting for.the Ellecfloli of ,.s4 „gets a- .,. •, , :« ��; r �.� - I il►t3r=filuo.ra:�l L+a.a/1i1bi �:.:.ae .i11:...L ::., ... ' �.. .,. "I.f ......:,6, Prayer, and will 'be observed by for the Red Cross for the coming Jackson Building, Ottawa, or the 'nearest of these' RX.A.F. Recruiting Centte_st 'both -chutches here. All meetings• year- in the school on Wednesday.. Vcincoaver, Calgary; Edmonton, 'Saskatoon Regina,- Wlnnipeg, North Bad�`` Windsor, I,oadeo, 8amllb�, will be held at 8 o'clock, and the January 6th. "Torotrto, .Ottawa, f+Iantreal, •Quebec, Moncton, IE3alifa� _ 1 A tsepective Pastors will have charge. Mr. and Mrs, Jack Chapman have Services will', be held on Mondray been recent visitors with - Mr. and A, 4 ^ 2 ,. .� • �•,+.1^,r iYi"e@,vC'7'ra".. h{�•'',' jY'7.'CtL `$'N�9i3 "JM ..'.( +Y,k¢ � '..ppr XkkR ; 4., qc "` :R±tl• '�G ^ _ 44 .. - - _ � TO ADOLF, WITH WORST WLSHFS - n n getting H • •� � �. �� v w which have already been shipped. • - Anne Aa 1 :•> F Factories making refrigerators, v t f;- -., •: ' j � �'• f shoes paper, paint. and vs slate v Q. How can I overcome the an- t ' Y i in a confidential draft of 300- _ . . ,noyance of -a shoe__.tongue that. odd plants for possible South p persists in slipping to one side? - -- :� Agaerican export which govern- _ A. If two short slits are cut,. _ ^s" " - w went , agencies have just drawn r r the top of the tongue, about . .r up. a a quarter- - -of an inch apart, and 'wit Lace is suppea mreugn these : : slits before inserting through -the • - -- "Horseburgers" t top_holes,_the trouble. will be over- come. - t - - There's nothing wrong with _ Q. How can. I mend enamel -. - -- horse meat—but the idea. w ware? _ _ - - A Americans, if rationing drives A A. By mixing equate parts of them to it,, can, eat their horse, p putty, salt, and coal 'ashes thor- - b burgers -and choice cuts of old o odghly. `Apply to hole' and heat • D Dobbin secure in the knowledge o on stove until the composition is - -- -- - r t that as a body builder horse meat h hard. It will withstand either hot is ] ist as z� w.d ra, uvrk- beef or � �z�b• poultry: ' t td• How -can j, -make a- substi: Medical science, nutrition ea- t tuts for cracker crumbs? ports and diet authorities agreed A. If you have no cracker _ = t today that aside from an' old crumbs -on, hand,' -try using, cam Ameriran�peJudice —not shared f flakes. Toast them, then crush by many Europeans — there's w with a rolling pin, and you wili ` n nothing against the horse as a h have a tasty substitute. - s source -of -food. - S S..How should smgll . washable - - The 30,000 pounds of horse- r rugs be laundered? -' m meat sold by one butcher in Boa- A A. They may be washed in the _ -_- - -- t ton in 48 hours may be the fore- w washing machine, but they should - - . : - - - -- f_ -The' crew of this American Flying Fortress. in England fixed a bang -up Christmas .present for Adolf r runner of gengral acceptance of n not be put through the wringer:' Hitler in the form ,of the Yule- greetinged bomb .seen in the photo. - The "Santa Claus" is Lieut. A. J. t this as the share- the -meat pre- I on the line to dry, and the will - • '- Davis, of New •iF -ork. - • • - - - - - depletes the supply of } }den keep their shape. y steaks and chops. - ' A Q. , _ -Modern 'Eti iletE� I In a small country 'town a � �] Q�,�„ __ _ _ � ,How c -- — m meeting tested been- ealled- to,- dbxuss - - - -is j +� _ — - �. b #fge- should ev -ei be a'1= _ 1. • When one is in the reseneb d day for the people. 1 1.:a� a ation - d bitterness, and the boiling - p V Various proposals were put . - -� - - d destro b of another person and a telegram w .for- - _ Entire Factories Beiny _ _- - -- - f flavor. or fetter is delivered to him, Which g gested a "Pleasant Sunday. After. S Shlpped From United States G God, give us eye§ to see the :human., he must read at once, what should - noon." n need; E Eng=ne To 'Go Back . - - he- say? �- n A grim woman. rose and said: A A wholesale plant: export pro= G God, give' trs hands to_do the noble I ... _ _ -.. _... .. .the. customary ntun• A These will. be no pleasant Sun - g gram, in which . entire -factories d deed;: . 'Of B : ber of bridesmaids at am elaborate- r r� a are being, lifted up and ship ed G God. sire us heastm that bleeii- clturth wedtl d from the United' States, is -being ' W When others bleed; A An engine' of the German 2ep. _ S. to it permissible for a dinner f iris Irishman: f car lied on by Washington ages- H Hear us, Good Lord. ' ' -pelin Hindenburg destroyed by - - guest to mention any preferences i would ye& rather be In, Pat c cies, which plan to accelerate ship- - - fire -at bakehurst, k. J•, May 6, -, in foods? w explosion or a Collis- m ments soon, Newsweek points out. G God,- -hake us. great, not with 1 1937, may go Lack to Germany- 4. To what should one give the , ,, . I I;atest evielen*_ce of thii came e ere power 'and gold, . i in bombs and bullets. The 1,600- - ,Paca�ca2< thought la ll.o ..•.iti'vatiac S Second ditto: ''Ia a spills- w when, the Uffue of War Informs = -- - -But with compassion strong and h horsepower. 1 -2- cylinder motor, - - - . ..of a Rood speaking voice? / /oab because is a Callihan. t tion announced that the Douglas m meekness . bold, u used' for several years as a demon -- - - - 5. Should candles' be used- *11- 0 there yez are, but in an *it- l 011 'Refinery, near Los Angeles, F For others, sot ourselves, the s stration and practice unit -in an. luncheon table' t t �.. would °b'e shipped to Russia and is t a aviation machine shop 6. How should a l refuse a ' expected to be making 87- octane H -hold; , ing school, is in a junk yard await- -_ :- ._dance'. . .�I hear, that F+ n�aer Jones' R Ras there within a year. It wil! : : ' - i ing shipment as. scrap metal. hired man left- him.` - b be transferred under lend - tease... L Lod, make us true, clear as the - - 2. "WiII you excuse me " "Yes, he said he ebuMn't stand T This follows other such purchases - - heavetr is clear, ' ' pl'mse ?" 2. Although the number t the cold." f for_ Rpssis, . including Ford's tiro ' 'Clean in our w..y of life, . British Sailors' Society its eenttirietl �s matter of personal , , -Why, it's no colder on the p plant. These are to be shipped k . n At Home 'and Abroad cholifti usually -a" less th's8 ...:. - - ---- . ' -- - ,ff . ' - - - - --' -- - - --- - — r r — — _.. Iaco9posaisi .. . — _ - ► ► ' five nor more than. ten - "N'o, but he heard over the S Shipments already made - to `the f far and near; r rader Disfiagataked Patroaage maids at an elaborate wedding; r radio-that farpt labor was to be S Soviet included a considerable H Heal us, Good Lo[d. S Some Thousands' of Sailors will - >' offered, And -under no circum• frozen this year.' a arnouat of oil pipe line and pump- C God. give She world the visioned i CHRISTMAS and NEW YEAR ' -,_ Stances make reference to some - She was peeved and called t tives and freight cars sent to the p peace which came + it o kind—of—dish he particularly _ _ him Mr. i iran -Iraq region for Russia's anp- B Before men's eyes through smoke W WORLD Send SGifts to THE of ill- breeding. 4. To pitch or _ Not because he went and 1 1 lines. Part of an aluminum a and battle flame; BRITISH SAILORS SOCIETY - tone, and to the enunciation and - - Kr., - _ m mill has also been exported. with ' us a - George ill'.., speeate: But because just before t the rest to follow, and under con- . -a°miiterei A • ��� ;oaunciatien of svorla_ The most B _ As 9641 opened wGdtl rdr ` s siaerarcion now are a vuwer 06.9 _ .name; _ _ - ' a - door a and another, tire- making factory. — — Frederick George Scott. ' tvltl be greatly appreelated, .''s ,,heard, but clear. The voice should This same Mr. Kr. -Sr. ° y ' come from the ehest, and not "from the he . "I throat alone 6. : :; _ .SC xCE S S S I F I ED ADVERTISEME XTS _ have this dance engaged," if true. Aig lot the Z-1 Tqgelft� For" Army, now% 'in Africa, must be T -" . : ...:.: ....::•........:: ,:.. f congratulated on a fine piece o •'�:��, � ~ 6X g. K. In The Christian science Monitor _.. ''~work Which will lead to great - -- � - ' things. They were twelve young, very who were sentenced to, die, were �' "s b' u s How great these are to be.' 'young Frenchmen, mostly- from separated, from their comrades. " _A' " 4 in the near future will depend the Norman and Breton coa"st., When evening fell, a song was - w" very much on the air - strength of When the wan started, they all heard from their cell: , the United Nations. The axis is volunteered for the French flying 8iourir pour Is. patrie, ^ likely to try and setup the strong- forces and became. student-pilots - .C'est le..sort Is plus beau, x eat possible air cover in a triangle is one of France's air sehoot�. Le clue digne d'envie .! , - ivdr' Sicll'y; SiLrdinia, Corsica and They were eager to fight against It was Pierre who saflg.with loud _ Southern - Italy -all- well-equipped- -me- hereditary- enemy -of- their- - voice -Ar- prison -- guard -- brought a with• airfields. The Sicilian Chan- country, -but France -, broke dow>l letter to the others who eat. in s *� 'uel between Tunis and Marsala 16 and the students were dismissed. gloomy silence 'watching th,e first �• Is about 9 miles wide Y< _- s Sicily 1 0 Yet the twelve would not return gleam of daylight breaking through _ which means that strong Allied • homes. They decided to the small cell • window. They sec• ` to their }- fighter sweeps would be possible continue the struggle against the ognized Jean's handyritinpR w from Tunis in support of concen• Nazis on their own.- Dear Friends. and Brotheie . To- ' " l trated bombliig. Furthermore, Mal- - - , . , s - morrow at dawn, about 6 o'clock, to -which now turns from grim General de Gaulle's appeal to the we will be -told that our petition ` w and gallant defence to swift and ; l French had reached them, -for for clemency was refused, and an shattering- attack -is only 60 miles hour later we will have left this ' - their secret meetings • the young s > Y - last Malta comes into her own.�t zto4_ tc J�iz Ole F.. Site n bulle�fa11 L- ill n French arm The borrowed German bullets, we will stand' J F• Y { > The first task is .thus to clear money from their parents and a - the axis neck and crop out' o1 baud in hand and cry, Vive la friends and bought a small nine -•• = - >rancel" Yo_u; like us, live com• _ nex miffed the crime of loving ' our Africa: ' The t is to establish` f ton sailing.. vessel, the "Buhara." f air superiority from African air •hhey installed an outboard ma country. We pay 'without. regret w bases out over the Mediterranean. the price, of our patriotism The third is to destroy as much tar, purchased some food, and on And ' a cold, tog winter da et out d o dear comrades in time l possible f the L ftwaLfe on hoping to treachy)✓ngiand. of hope ua.n dill fortune, remember as o u its advanced bases to create the to sea' b:. * Soon the ,motor broke down, and us shd' be worthy of us. Pray [os conditions - in_ which. successful the small coat went adrift. When our dear France and for us, tau, �_. d 1 'bined .,flame open 2�� ad - -an to truth ;,.z,. n a; *dawn rose, the craft was over- a "- ~ ygn naui 9 CIeT further Tha . ► n(s_ ken by a (.:grman patrol -boat - -'^ ' 5 _ wtatfs must be made -to Sight -the - and the young men were arrested.` Jean M. -`.. more it fights the better for the s s s s • • a. Allied cause. Aircraft production is America and Great Britain now When they returned to port, and'- Both wefe shot a_ t dawn. Tbey that were led to prison surrount!ed by - died a1g they had lived; courag- outstrips at of -the axis by a German- soldiers, the town people eously. The ten others were senE _!ride _margin._The_ higher- .the -rate' _ - - -- y watched from their thresholds, to • Berman conc_entratlon damps - r - of wastage which can be forced_ oa the axis the quicker will come grim and sad. The trial before In France. They are still there, the absolute air mastery which is the German military court 'was living under Nazi iron rule. abus- .,.::,. the key to victory. summary, The German judges of- Pd by ruthless Nazi hangmen. Yet ,• <'' fered mercy to any of the young neither they nor' their -murdered men who were willing to denounce comrades have •been forgotten. ___ . -• _ the instigators of their flight. All lkench- underground papers have - V 01. CE ' refused! The Nazie_sentenced the published their story, and their _ Sayid ]dris (left) header'-4f the Senussi Arabs, is greeted by his, - s oldest of them to be executed, and names have become a symbol of _ -, troops in traditional manner. Formerly under Italians, they joined O F T H E the others to hard labor for life- French resistance against Nazi Allies recently inin I.ibvs- P 0 17 iC � •', a None at them 11in,Chsd nflnraawten- Thonaiands flad tiOIIa� ' ' -8 All When they were brought back ands of French- youth are wiling THE WAR - WEEK - [ orhmenta,ry or Currenj Events ,. SAVE THE YOUNG PIGS to prison, Jean M. and Pierre D. to follow their example. - . Lowering the mortality rate in War Shortens million yards of cotton and other_ S seR z r AMM Air Pn er y I- . _ .__ fobries., • More '.than 1D,000,000 y I*` i_ �L t step toward meeting the bacon en ! llrlli$iis add'iti�nal shirts will be manutaq- nsures Success ill North Africa - production objective of •67- ,000,- tured from the material raved, it The United States War Produc- Bala- 000 pounds set. in the new British. tiotr Board has shortened the na- ' Fotu main factors• may be said performance., The result it a high- agreement. In fact, this may be tion's shirttails to insure an ads- At the same time, the order im-- - to account for the great Allied air flying fighter which is not only ag em ensured means of achiev posed a general simplification pro- - _ mccesses Sri North Africa. They delightful to fly but qupreme in F quite supply of the visible pants grant on men's and bo"' pyjamas, tag the goal. o! ,here . rments and `ordered - are lmportaat bees a they have speed and tire- power. This Spit• ► effective Dec. lb, which will save Too many young pigs are lost for similar reasoaa sweeping re- enough material to intake- 2,200,1 stover been present Sefore all to- fire is a world beater-:-and for• - "� ,other. They sre important also tunately there are going to be ' each year - almost invariably forms in pyjama styles.. Pants - 000 additional pairs of pyjamas. ` _wkeri those four analities Plenty of them. through ignorance .rather. than cuff fans and zoot -suit s,ddicta e ^f ^, racul: were de - eaa ins combined the make -pot- a the ether types' of aircraft pri�rU ul further upper - -sible decisive results., which have done so well -in North tag in anaemia, worms and disease tunity to indulge their f4neies The s•ROCk" - germs are common causes -of seri- �I The tour ffictors were -and are: Africa the Hurricane and Kitty along those linen. - - - cur losses in young pigs: -': 1.- Superiority is t e c h n I c a 1 hawk fighter, bombers, the Am- The board ordered from two to ' A rock and not much more a quality of aircraft. erican Boston; Baltimore and -Mit- - Winnipeg Tribune. fifes inches taken' o!f men's and chunk , of limestone two and a a 2.—Superiority !a numbers, shell medium. bombers, and the -O- boys' shirts made niter Dec. 16' 'half miles long and 1,550 yards LOOK IT UP, HITLER - -Ad Sfax and Liberator heavy bomb= and estimate that this will result wide Gibraltar controls• the_ lldedi- _ it. equate ground - orgsaiza• '-S>ral y d Lion for servicing, maintenance and --ens have been outstanding. To 'Granti'ng that Herr Hitlei in an annual saving- of sdveral ' terranean !or 500 miles. = repair, single. out but. one -She . Douglas- _ leela all the admiration for .-the _ _ 4.- Masterly- �. handling of the Boston III of the British Air ' music of Richard Wagner he pro. LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher • -.e ab. nyUa avaas �� °- Aw..,- fassP it■ Rtill. a cinnin tio+ nt+n �f 7 Il&6V. 1 lay - Loia .e.i - Pere*% similar to the A term —sa offensive. A -20C, has performed magnificent- the composer's works is never - Added to those essential qualf- ly And has lent itself to new and played or mentioned in his pies- ' B g ties is >,he fact tbkt a chain of air, -brilliant tactics described by air ease. That's his 'Rule Britannia' - = MRS PIPrS DIARY, 1,411 s = bases were available for occupa- Chief Marshal Sit' Arthur Tedder March which he wrote and sent � 0 d tlon as the advance went forward as "Boston tea parties." Ia these toAhe London philharmonic Orch- / �/. a westward r from Egypt And east- "parties" concentrated attacks are extra for perfoimawee irr iS40:" -- -- 0 ward froaii Algeria. And further- made by Bostons.'1n close forms- - Detroit Free Press. s Uwe the axis use of their own tion against enemy fighter air- -o- air forces was distiagutshed by dromee. The -bombs are dropped ",WE DON'T BELIEVE IT 'Mal bei Imaglnnttnn. nor lattiativp at .16 yard intervals eves the One o' our readers -laims -•to -• - '� -time- the Luft- whole Aarget wb#e" thus com- -of overheard the fellowin' dis- watts was so rigidly bound to its pletelY blanketed. Overlaps , are'.. ]ogue': sronud forces that It could ,ex- liable to be reprimanded. Buyer - "How about a little ploit none of the versatility which quite early in the attacks the butter ?" _ characterizes air -power and Is so Allied forces had built up superior- Dealer - "We ain't got none." 1' , eessentiai for its success.' Sty of numbers over the 'Luftwaffe Buyer - "Oh, go _down in the ` Let us examine more closely in Egypt - estimated at some 600 cellar and have a look arotwd." �a chose four-factors in success. German and 400 Italian* first -line Dealer -41 can't." In the first place' the 7 Allied aircraft. The magnificently organ- " ��. -- Jorces had a marked technical Ized workshops behind 'the lines ' Buyer - Why not . _ ! = �Desler= " Cellar steps -are block- superiority in the aircraft employ- made possible the 'maidtenance-i>t� ed, with cases." < rd. The basis of all air-power is the Allied aircraft in action at a ?" fibs single -seat tighter 'and both in constant level. In- that respect the Buyer—"Cases " of what. ftypt and in French North Africa enemy failed and, as he - retreated, :Dealer- Butter. Statbeams the Su ermarine• Spitfire, flown- abandoned much of his equipment . 'by British, American and-imperial -O- -' dots showed that it ia'the fighter Malta In New-Role 'COLD- BLOODED "par-excellence." T he Spitfires . The use of parachute troops in Japanese airmen have deliber- were able to ,PStah11Ah real sdr . French North Africa is .another ately bombed Red Cross hospitals - supremacy -not merely superior- example of the exploitation of the to tne-,uuti17�rdLtiic. i.udi, s JusL /� risIIL WeapOIIa lII Lne rIgIIL places. - arivliAcr dVUVAV -GLVLJ by the .laps. �,� ny—and so drive the enemy •out - Windsor Star: ;, / ot'the. sky: The 1,500 mile flight by the,Am•• erican and British troops under -o= -- - Improved Spitfire _ I:t. Col. Edson D. Ruff in their . - -, 'I Y`-­GO UNDER HE Incidentally, •a s {ill further 'im- Douglas transpwts' from England Lloyd's of London' is- now, •4 proved version of the Spitfire is to Africa must rank as one of the housed in offices 50 feet under �,�; =p i✓ •�c,•Q. S - ,Z3 now in service' p'bwered 'with the great feats of its 'kind' hn this ground. Yes, they're the under- new Rolls Royce, Merlin Sixty: war and of immense significance, writers. : !'pq I jooklike.■ person who stops every time a strange man :whistles pas motor of greatly increased for the future. In ever way the $sin n Spectator. at me ?!!" POP Turkey _ _•. $y J. MILLAR WATT A LI-r TOLD BME-. __-- - - - -.' mod► - - - -- � - -= y '- ` - -- 'i-� WHAT MAKES YOU Ill "CW I N K _ -r vE -BE6N- - RAIDING THE �' SIR i - - ._. -�!iJ -. :.. .. - -- -• x I GE ^BOX \ 1 d .. iRNUwO 'OY'sue Ben PY•d�av- toe' .. ._.. / ��. % .v'e,. +: cJ r „Y,._•a5azo.S< au.:.::cy.•vn,:s -:: ”' ..oey+d'c.C•.. -. -.y- +,. -�. :.�;'•'• _ a•"i'r f•' .-.c' - , - •i3•e<' .,- �:a•.�= s..,.. •.�, .++r�.r. • s.. ' I '• tit: tC .�.� d :: - - * _. ... _ ■ . � '. _ 7. „l � - II 1 -ICI •� - —• - �lt�iiMiKetl tlsrtit;<i�. is , • _.., ... • _ - ""`- `°-`”` NOTICE eason s Greetings E. FOR,SYTH, O Director - -_..._ �� • Ascots ph• D•• .!Membef of atioo of oaoao To our many Q .. Ore., tlMese Members tee Amerkan •oetom.a:. -.t Oas troeb pass jour way. every um- Eyes ezaminw by appointment. noc Clar=D-ot. out. >�.,. friends, old &new -,�. t, Obese twyai. COAL, COKE, _ "•.•'PVUUD CEMENT we extend best We wish our man friends - DUNALD RUDDY Barrister, �t , ' r z V - Ra'SoUator. Notary Public.- Monayto Loan. :1SA1�iD GiRA VEL - - — - -- -. •7 _ eti�si, hnmer�loccupp,ed by 'the late A. E. Chris. N'aa.soutb• of Couq Hrivay. Wbftby. '31y f ghee f BEATON, BELL Ross -acrd wishes or a very and customers 2. Barristers is Solicitors BUILDER'S SUPPLIEfa Happy, ProsperousF ` W. J.BEATON.K,Q Telephone alto local•eartbge %ork _ _.. - the Compliments of the Season - 01- BROOKE BELL, K. C. Adel,2838e We havealaopla�ed in stock a full ! New Year J, D. F. ROSE L= at MAPLE LEAF MILLIN ii 372BaySt: 10I1N L. PCND - Toronto_._ _ 0' � .. - AwOGUS,McwiLLAN­ Barrister, Sol- Motor Ambulance, . Day or Night - teltor, N�,Iotary Public. 19 Melinda Street A V MITCHELL - - Toronto. Teledbone Elvin 6208. 29tf _ • e PHONt 1800 ( 5 prosperous New Year -Pickering, - -'- Ont. f=tsls►,psa W ttvbs. _PHONE Office 44 — ,lie.. ,3e C. A. STERRITT = /j - R. BEATON; TOWNSHIP Funeral Director -d 1r1 a so CHAFMA D e Clerk. Conveyancer. Commiaioner for „ akiatt afdavlta. Accounant,`Etc. Isuer.of Furniture Dealer tiHeelaa Lieea.es. whitsala; out. PICKERING AND CLAREMONT - - -- ` _ _ Nn a in Vni tiENF}RAL INSURANCE• lrcicerfn Nerd - REAL ESTATE We do building of all kinds For COU h8 - g ware CONVEYANCING CARPENTERING . CEME`�ITING ji ad established ai'wy, �y - - - - - - - - - - - u es - �� s r t ish for to eer.e. - Phone Pick. 6004. -- -- =_: - -- - ROOFING - -' USE --A Merr Chi We also sell Brw tford Roofing Pasmore Cough 3fixture Y Christmas'' and Materials, Empire Bathroom - - - ��T ... Hope for- Peace- - , _ M. Y>r Equipment, Duro Water _ C, B Q. Cold Tablets and Happiness in LJCRNEiitD AUCTIONEER AND SSA, Beatty Stu le Theft band up your resistance _ VALUATOR _ Equipment, and -- -- -- __ __= ... - - -- - - - -. ent, . _ .rib _ The New Year ' „fislea ceaductad Anywhere' Building Materials Puretest Cod Liver Oil- - Phone or write_ Addew [std nvedaa _ ra t1treet, East. j But for the tender grace �L Whitby. Ontario. Estimates Free Our Prescription Service is That with _ .. Work Guaranteed gin s tl cheer shy 1'y Doane sec _ Accurate and Eltldfst .. .. Barth 's lonlieat, darkest place, i,. = ;- .. • ' W C' SERVE -_.. Phone 6¢� - _ _ F1or by that charity we see PICKERING. ONTARIO :i `j�•f Lta G` "` i• I" rar sill ana' me. AND ALSO GIVE F. J. YHOU E THE RE TALL 51 ORE J. S. BALSt70N, - _ PICKERII'V__ t ,Phone. Pick 68 INSURANCE ,ems -rEZ� LEVINE a A. :prORE HOURS R Barrister, Solicitor eta '8 a.m. 9 p-M. Sm. 9 a.m. 8 p$1n, I .77SERVICE Odeoe hoe= -- 1 - 6. Wes mW am tJaaatied As.erW�enwgI& FARMERS Yin Str. Pickiri>A . • _ _ _ t . . -NTM >< ilI s[t to Litt it . _ r C � P I �. L' . ��.�z . � e., .,�.i — �..,. W HEAD QMOR -- ngHA' WA to rent for Jan. 1. A 1 Gagner, GENERAL INIURANCE S WE PAY TORONTO PRICES AT WHITBY YOUR HOME MABY>L'F SEAVICS PROTECTICN - Pickering, Ont. 1. e . O p ' ILL -FOR SALE -: 11. pigs &, weeks old. - EGGS r.. HOGS 5 ' FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND E. Stroud Danbarton. CALVES LAMBS 1 0 C K — Bought • and - Said— :. ISMBALINISR Used Clothitng• — Sterilized, clean- AND ALL g1ND8 OF - 9ucceeaor;to. W. J. M%ther.i ed and pressed like -new. Ca a _ {:Ico•,Bv1t� large stock of high class 'Carry -- - - PII6tt Do, J%t lice A15o a good HEATRE � stock of new leather coats and `I 1 n8 t>leel I1t t IeEit:,ttt, FLti ,windbrealaers,' and gents furnish- MILKERINC F'ARXIS ings at very reasonable prices. Call i wHrT$'s- and be convinced _ LIMITED D • A. :B -E Z :F Sam Schwartz �- _IRJD(31>!I'�RI�D IIXst3 - _. y Healthfully Air - conditioned Zl Bond Str. West, Oshawa ntiITBY ONT. PHONE WHi13TY0i'd ,. The Management Extends to All Beet. Wishes For A Bri'ghier s jlisuraAce of All Kinds.. SAWS OFF ALL KINDS Th _ - set Kates AcailablF W1tt filed by - THURSDAY, FRI., SATURDAY ¢'cape y e OSCAR U'DELL Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. and 2. secuelty and 6erviae. - c _ .'W hitevale, Ont. SEASON S. - - :% "hvo shows at 7 and 9 p, m. add -. -Phone -- _ GREETINGS Saturday ,Matinee at 1.30 sROUGH7►M 'PICK 51S _ -'Ho11da I4latinee R.0 'CLENDENINa = -= ___ =_ y Fri., at 2 o'clock ,- '_Bing Crosby end Fred Astaire PHONE AGIN. by W 8, MILIdbE)< FUNERAL DIRECTOR - • . TO All • -. Day or Night Clarke 'Prentice ..,Private Ambulance HolidaX Inn Pbon ark. 9M Or - - - -_ Msrjorie Reynolds Virginia Dale. LICENSED AUCTION L+`ri;$ _ Maly - SILK'S MARKET For the Counties of York mW out Markham, O e MONDAY, TUES., WEDNESDAY ono; successor for Corpl. a� Pees - - -. . January 4.. 5, and a lice of C. A. S. F. and of &bs , l.t, ,t,10 IT NOW! Last complete $how at 8.20 J. H• l+tentice ormer Prt:ntwe sn S .►t�i�fiUNIN�s Prentice). Faun and Farm Spur '_x A N U -Call out the Marine Sales a specialty at fair and rats,,,- - -- able rates '. All hinds'of F epair �1 -ork Send —the b03is- lralper Victor kleLagen• ana Edmund Lowe All I �aing Guaranteed P _ Also an Added Attraction li- -C. b. �t ac' L i1 N ei u. - ' Special rate for soldiers Art Husbands Merry Christmas -- Zo9 Close Ave: Toronto - Necessary and a :$1.b0 per. year in advance Raq IMiland and l3eetty New Year Th e News -Sprat rate open until .Ian. THURSDAY, yFRI., S ATL RDAY —• iE$$n� • - - -- — - -- - - - -- Jallu —r g, a,ta 9� . n --- eXtends- t-he�-season -s' - �..:,..•,y� ,�.�,, r.:��•r.ar. Friends and - ' - , :The Gay Sisters greetings to the - The World's ewe Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITORS t With Barbara S.anwyck ; ,- - CustOniers - An Intonational Daily Netvspsptr - many new friends iy Truthful-- �ortrtructive- iJnliaeed —Fees from s�l.:ti,:i. - PICKE�`�j� �'! also Thanking you i m— Editorials Are Timely and In inactive and n Daily RING L _ Factures, Together wirh the Weeldy Magazine Section, Mahe Vi �d. t1L_e° old alike - — ---- --r -aa Ided ---- -paper for the HoQte - -- - -- -- "1�eC[jJQ - The Christian Science Publishing Society - One, Norway Streeq Bosion,, Massachtreetq of the "as ear Pries :12.00 Yearly, or ;1.00 .Mends. - ' FOR SALE AT ''Of 1942 p Y - 'Saturday Issue, includingagaaina Section, $2.60 . Yom. " - ' - - Introdu Offer, 6 Saturday rwet 23 Cents. i � , y 4 yes' Urn Store . Fautern Hamm —=�- �ilVIN BUSHB d 3'T, GEORGE'S GUILD _ - Name Tlnemitb The January meeting of St. Addnw _+ook's Service Stn. -------------------------------------------- $ardware George's Guild will be held at the PHONE 4i - SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST � - WM- C. MURKA$ Rectory off January 7, at 3 p. m. , , I .11 1 JUSTICE OF THE PEACR PICKERING As this will be Election of Officers the County of Ont1iT10 all p�lteiibers are requested to be 6• PICKi'i=Q ONT. present.